Jawbone takes on Weight Watchers with its latest app update
There are things fitness trackers are generally pretty good at. You know, like counting your steps, measuring how many calories you burned. And then there are things fitness trackers are generally bad at. Logging your food intake is a particularly sore point. After all, it’s not like the onboard sensors can tell when or what you’ve eaten, so you have to go through the tedious business of manually entering all your meals. What’s more, companies like Jawbone and Fitbit aren’t exactly weight-loss specialists, which means their food databases tend to have gaping holes compared to services like Weight Watchers. So, even if you’re disciplined enough to keep a food diary, the thing you ate might not even be in the system. That goes double if you eat out — how are tech companies supposed to know how many calories are in the brownies at that cafe around the corner?
Incidentally, that’s where Jawbone thinks it can do better. The company just released a major update to its iOS app, and it’s all about weight loss. Accordingly, users can now set a weight goal, at which point the app creates a daily calorie target based on your height, goal, current weight and physical activity (remember that the app can log workouts, in addition to your total step count). Unsurprisingly, it would seem existing Up owners have been clamoring for features like this: According to the company, 76 percent of people who use the Up band have a weight goal in mind, and 84 percent of those who log food do so to lose weight. Makes you wonder why Jawbone didn’t address this sooner — rival Fitbit has let you set a weight goal for ages now.
Things get interesting when you actually start to log your food. For one thing, Jawbone lets you batch-add lots of items at once. So, if you had oatmeal, a banana and orange juice for breakfast, you can do a long-press and then add it all in one fell swoop. (If that sounds like a rudimentary feature, consider this: Weight Watchers’ apps still don’t let you do batch-add, and its entire business is centered on weight loss.) Also, Jawbone’s app learns its users’ habits, so it’ll surface foods you eat often. Similarly, if you start to add something like fried eggs, the app will show you foods that other people often eat at the same time. Bacon, for example — people like to eat bacon with eggs.
And now we get to the part where you go to brunch and your tempura oyster frittata isn’t in the food database. So then what? Well, Jawbone’s app now shows listings for local restaurants, and thanks to integration with recipe/food-delivery services like Munchery, PlateJoy, The Orange Chef, HealthyOut and NuMi (coming soon), it can sometimes import the calorie info. Unfortunately, though, if a restaurant isn’t represented there, you’ve got little choice but to turn to crowdsourcing. You could enter the data yourself, for instance, which would involve doing the calorie math on your own (eggs + oysters + home fries). That’s what Weight Watchers users do when they go out, and it isn’t always precise, depending on who’s entering the data. Alternatively, you could ask the restaurant staff about calories, though let’s be real: That’s kind of awkward. Or, the eatery could add its nutritional info through the same back-end service used to aggregate those restaurant listings in the first place. All told, it’s not an especially comprehensive system, but it’s better than nothing: While other apps might include chains like Starbucks, they tend not to offer calorie data for mom-and-pop joints.

Throughout, the app shows how many calories each food item is worth, and you can see at a glance how many calories you “have left,” depending on your daily target. In addition, though, Jawbone has created what it calls a food score, a single number on a scale from 1 to 10 that illustrates how healthy your food choices are. These numbers are color-coded too, so when you see a score of 1.8 for cream cheese in bright red, you know you’ve done something wrong. (Ed. note: If cream cheese is wrong, I don’t want to be right.) Finally, in addition to seeing your rolling food-score average for the day, you can also see how you’ve been doing over longer periods of time. Basically, then, the idea is not just to count your calorie consumption, but also to give you information you can use to possibly even change your habits. To that end, Jawbone is also adding some food-related challenges to its “Today I Will” feature. Think: eating a certain amount of fiber for the day. Yum.
Version 3.2 of the Jawbone Up app is available today, but only on iOS for now. The Android app will receive the same update, according to a company rep, but it’s still in development. So happy downloading, iPhone users, and Android fans, even if you can’t try out the new features today, you might still enjoy Jawbone’s interactive food-pairing table — it’s a pretty good way to waste a few minutes at work. You know, after you’ve had your toasted bagel with cream cheese.
Filed under: Wearables, Software, Mobile
Source: Jawbone
Get £80 off Amazon’s 7-inch Kindle Fire HDX for today only
If you’ve been thinking about picking up an Amazon tablet, the internet retailer could well force your hand with its latest deal. For today only, the company will sell you the 7-inch Kindle Fire HDX at an £80 discount, meaning you’ll be able to grab the 32GB model for just £149 or the 64GB model for £179. Surprisingly, the low-cost 16GB model isn’t included, nor is the 8.9-inch version of the tablet. In our review, we liked the tablet’s bright and vibrant display, long battery life and Amazon’s enhancements to Fire OS — if that grabs you, act quickly, because the deal will end at midnight tonight.
Filed under: Tablets, Mobile, Amazon
Source: Kindle Fire HDX (32GB), (64GB)
Alleged iPhone 6 Touch ID Fingerprint Sensor Shown Off in New Photos
Nowhereelese.fr (Google Translate) shares some new photos of an alleged Touch ID fingerprint sensor said to be for the iPhone 6. The component appears to be mostly similar in design to the Touch ID component used for the iPhone 5s, aside from relocated screw holes that line up with the metal housing of the device.
iPhone 5s Touch ID sensor (top) and alleged iPhone 6 Touch ID component (bottom)
Apple supplier Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is said to have provided the first batch of fingerprint sensors for the iPhone 6, iPad Air 2 and iPad Mini 3 in May. A report last month noted that these newer Touch ID units would be more durable than the ones currently found in the iPhone 5s thanks to an updated manufacturing process that uses tin.
Higher shipments for Touch ID components would likely help launch supplies for the iPhone 6, as low yield rates of the component were reportedly to blame for the limited supplies of the iPhone 5s last year. The iPhone 6 will likely be announced and launched this September, and is expected to come in two sizes of 4.7-inches and 5.5-inches. However, a recent report suggested that the company is running into production issues with the device, which may lead to the 5.5-inch version launching after October or in early 2015.![]()
The Big Picture: Boeing 787-9 performs extreme maneuvers at Farnborough
Boeing’s original Dreamliner may be old news by now, but a longer variant — the 787-9 — is about to enter passenger service with Air New Zealand. That extended aircraft is also on display for would-be airline customers this week at the Farnborough Airshow, just south of London. With a very light load on board, Boeing’s able to show off its latest plane with some extreme maneuvers, including steep takeoffs and high-bank turns just feet off the ground. The moves may make you uneasy, but they’re designed to demonstrate the aircraft’s flexibility — you won’t experience any of these intense angles on a commercial flight, but you can get a feel for what the new 787 can do in the video after the break.
[Photo credit: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images]
Filed under: Transportation
Source: Boeing (YouTube)
Hailo’s Uber-like private car service launches in London
Hailo’s long been a friend to London’s black cabbies, giving drivers another way to find punters through its mobile app. With competition from upstart Uber already rubbing black cab drivers up the wrong way, they went as far as vandalizing Hailo’s HQ when the company announced that it, too, was going to launch a private care service in London. Undeterred, the new HailoExec option has started to roll out to Hailo’s iOS and Android apps, meaning you can request a ride in one of the company’s new, in-house fleet of luxury motors. Hailo’s own drivers might not possess the same Knowledge as black cabbies, but getting lost in the labyrinthine streets of London won’t be a burden on your wallet, as you’re quoted the full cost of the journey before you set off.
The new private car service essentially makes Hailo a direct Uber competitor — especially since the latter added a way to hail black cabs from within its app recently. Considering Hailo’s operated relatively uncontested in London and elsewhere, it’s reacting quickly to disruptive new player Uber, even if it’s losing a few friends along the way. Seeming as HailoExec doesn’t calculate fares live, it’s unlikely the Licensed Taxi Drivers Association (LTDA) will be able to use the illegal taximeter argument to give Hailo any bother. Although we do cringe at the thought of another misguided attempt to shut down competition as opposed to, you know, just competing.
Filed under: Cellphones, Transportation
Via: Wired
Source: Hailo
Honda’s upgraded ASIMO robot is faster and smarter but still won’t scare Sarah Connor
Honda’s been working on its ASIMO robot for the better part of two decades, but only now is it finally beginning to look like a useful project. The latest version of the droid, similar to the one we saw two years ago, comes with a raft of physical improvements, including new legs that’ll cope with uneven terrain, walk backwards and even run at speeds of nearly six miles an hour. Then there are the redesigned hands, which now have 13 degrees of freedom, enabling the ‘bot to hold and manipulate objects without crushing or dropping them.
It’s not just physical improvements either, since Honda has also been working hard on ASIMO’s artificial intelligence. For instance, the machine can walk around without the aid of an operator, and can observe human behavior and predict the outcome. That means that if ASIMO sees someone hurtling down the corridor, it can work out that it needs to move out of the way. The droid is also capable of picking out multiple voices and faces from crowds and identifying multiple voices when they’re all talking at once. Even more impressively, however, is that the automaton can even communicate in sign language thanks, in part, to those redesigned hands. The only question that remains, of course, is if we’d take one of these over SoftBank’s Pepper? We know that the rival device is nowhere near as useful, but you have to admit, it is a lot cuter.
Filed under: Robots
Via: Pocket-lint
Source: Honda
Logitech Unveils New Protection+ Case and +Trip Car Mount for iPhone 5s and iPhone 5 [iOS Blog]
Back in May, Logitech announced its new Case+ product for the iPhone 5s and iPhone 5, which contained a metal case and multiple magnetic attachments for different uses. Today, the company unveiled two new products inspired by the line: the new Protection+ case for iPhone 5s/5 and the +Trip accessory for mounting an iPhone to a car’s air vents for easy viewing.
Logitech’s Protection+ case
The Protection+ case for the iPhone 5s and iPhone 5 features a slim design with a protective outer shell and internal impact-resistant materials. The case’s corners each hold impact resistant polymers to minimize forces of impact, while the accessory’s insides feature a thermoplastic rubber (TPR) layer to absorb energy from drops. Logitech’s Protection+ case also comes with a raised bezel edge to protect the iPhone’s touch screen and is tested for drops from up to 1.8 meters (about 6 feet) in height.
Logitech’s +Trip car mount
Logitech’s +Trip car mount is also being sold alongside the original +Drive accessory that attaches to a car’s dashboard or windshield and came with the original Case+ system. The Protection+ case as well as the +Trip and +Drive mounts also all contain magnetic mounts to support the other Case+ attachments.
The Protection+ case will launch next month for $34.99, and will come in colors of Winter White, Gunmetal Black, Scarlett Plum, and Pacific Blue. The +Trip and +Drive accessories will also be released next month and sell for $29.99 and $49.99, respectively. Interested customers can pre-order all three now on Logitech’s official website.![]()
[DEALS & STEALS] A bunch of Google Play Edition (GPE) devices are on sale at Expansys USA, up to 46% off

Google removed Samsung Galaxy S4, HTC One (M7), Sony Xperia Z Ultra and LG G Pad 8.3 Google Play Edition device from Google Play Store recently. People have been complaining ever since, but this actually turned out to be a good thing. All of these devices are now available at Expansys USA at a heavily discounted prices:
- Samsung Galaxy S4 LTE GPE $399.99 (
$649.00), 38% off - HTC One (M7) LTE GPE $399.99 (
$649.99), 38% off - Sony Xperia Z Ultra LTE GPE $349.99 (
$649.99), 46% off - LG G Pad 8.3 Wi-Fi GPE $224.99 (
$329.99), 32% off
These are all still very powerful devices and the fact they have pure vanilla Android inside is a huge plus, at least in my opinion. All three of these smartphone offerings are of course unlocked. These are some very affordable prices for these devices so if you’re in a market for one follow the link(s) above and get yours today because the supplies are limited.
Source: Expansys USA
The post [DEALS & STEALS] A bunch of Google Play Edition (GPE) devices are on sale at Expansys USA, up to 46% off appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Samsung may turn to Under Armour to rival Apple’s relationship with Nike

In a bid to expand wearable sales, Samsung is reportedly entertaining the idea of teaming up with US sports apparel maker Under Armour. According to Yonhap News, Lee Jae Yong, the son of chairman Lee Kun Hee and heir apparent of Samsung Electronics, met with Under Armour CEO Kelvin Plank earlier this month, reportedly to discuss ways to counter the burgeoning collaboration between Apple and Nike.
While Samsung has already released second-generation Gear smartwatches and is rumored to be developing its own version of Google Glass, a tie-up with a sports clothing maker would give the Korean smartphone maker greater access to the health and fitness industry, which it’s doubled down on in recent hardware and software launches. Under Armour, of course, already develops its own performance trackers and Nike has a long history of Nike+ fitness accessories. However, Nike did recently cull its FuelBand team and shift its focus to fitness software. Neither company has confirmed the talks, but if true, it appears Samsung wants to ensure it’s not left behind by its biggest rival.
[Image credit: University of Delaware, Flickr]
Filed under: Wearables, Mobile, Samsung
Source: Yonhap News
Google now tells you how much your Bitcoin is worth
Let’s assume that you’ve just spent more than $200,000 on some of Russ Ulbricht’s Bitcoin fortune — but what do you do with it now? If it were us, we’d sit on our couch, constantly referencing Coindesk to find out how much our stash had gained (or lost) across the day. If, however, you’d prefer to source your information via search engine, then Google’s now offering live currency conversions for the cryptocurrency. Like the states and nations that took their time to take a stance on Bitcoin, Google’s taken its time to add the feature, which has been available on Bing for the better part of five months. Or, if the idea of sitting at home watching your cash doesn’t feel like fun, you could always sponsor an NCAA game.
Filed under: Misc, Internet, Google
Via: Coindesk










